International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2024)

Real-world evidence of sotrovimab effectiveness for preventing severe outcomes in patients with COVID-19: A quality improvement propensity-matched retrospective cohort study of a pan-provincial program in Alberta, Canada

  • Gregory Farmer,
  • Khokan C. Sikdar,
  • TKT Lo,
  • John Conly,
  • Jeremy Slobodan,
  • Jordan Ross,
  • Samantha James,
  • Hussain Usman,
  • Kyle Kemp,
  • Kristi Baker,
  • Karen Doucette,
  • Cheri Nijssen-Jordan,
  • Lynora M. Saxinger,
  • A. Mark Joffe

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 146
p. 107136

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: Post-marketing surveillance of sotrovimab's effect during implementation in the Canadian population is limited. Methods: The study used a propensity score–matched retrospective cohort design. Follow-up began between the periods of December 15, 2021 and April 30 2022. The study assessed any severe outcome defined as all-cause hospital admission or mortality within 30 days of a confirmed COVID-19–positive test. Covariate-adjusted odds ratios between sotrovimab treatment and the severe outcome was conducted using logistic regression. Results: There were 22,289 individuals meeting the treatment criteria for sotrovimab. There were 1603 treated and 6299 untreated individuals included in the analysis. The outcome occurrence in the study was 5.49% (treated) and 4.21% (untreated), with a median time from diagnosis to treatment of 1.00 days (interquartile range 2.00 days). In the propensity-matched cohort, sotrovimab was not associated with lower odds of a severe outcome (odds ratio 1.20, 95% confidence interval 0.91-1.58), adjusting for confounding variables. Conclusions: After adjusting for confounding variables, sotrovimab treatment was not associated with lower odds of a severe outcome within 30-days of COVID-19–positive date.

Keywords